Creative Sound BlasterX AE-5 – Is The Sound Card Really Dead?

Music Testing

Here we will take a look at various FLAC files ranging from classical, rock, country and even electronic music to see how the sound stage fares with the Sound Blaster AE-5 vs the motherboard integrated audio.

I would like to preface this by noting that I know there are a huge variety of external DAC, amplifier and even other audio card types available but I have to test these in a vacuum so to speak instead of going down the rabbit hole of the tens if not hundreds of other options at varying price points which are inherently an option as well. This testing is strictly to compare if the Sound BlasterX AE-5 is a viable and worthwhile alternative to the considered higher end motherboard integrated audio.

for motherboards I have the following to test

ASUS Maximus X Formula

ASUS Maximus XI Extreme

Gigabyte Z390 AORUS Pro WiFi

MSI MPG Z390 Gaming Edge AC

MSi X299 Gaming M7 ACK

Gigabyte X399 Gaming 7 (Supports Sound Blaster Connect Software)

Now with that noted you can see we have a nice cross section of boards with one even supporting the Sound Blaster Connect software.

Testing with the motherboard was as good as I could expect, as most all of them use the ALC1220 chipset, and the Realtek software in all honesty is pretty good with some adjustability along with predefined sound stage presets.

When I installed the Sound BlasterX AE-5 I was not expecting the defined difference I experienced.

First up was a cheaper Gaming headset I literally had hanging from my hardware rack as I wanted kind of a cheap toss around headset to give a clear idea of what you could expecto from a basic gaming perspective. The difference was staggering, even with cheaper driver quality I found the audio in electronic music to be much easier to discern between tones whereas with any of the motherboards I tested it did tend to be more bled together. Things god muddy quick with many instruments and tones melding together. With eh Sound BlasterX AE-5 I found I could select out specific tones and even instruments whereas before I simply did not have that level of clarity.

I then stepped up to some higher end cans to see how the experience changed and it was more of the same however at a much more defined level since the frequency response and clarity is much higher in higher end headsets. I found that the overall sound I got from the discrete card was as close to as possible to a night and day difference for me personally. I even brought in a secondary tester (my wife) to do a blind listen to some electronic music among other music familiar to her and she picked the audio from the Sound BlasterX AE-5 as being the best and clearest by far in every test sample I played for her.

I then Grabbed something which most might not consider and that is ear buds. I have some AKG ear buds I use while traveling and figured they would be an interesting test. The tiny drivers definitely got a bit more punch to them when driven from the Discrete card but to mirror the other tests, the real tell was in the clarity. There was no point where I found the tones mudding together and I could still discern specific instruments or sounds even with the tiny drivers.

Lastly I grabbed my other travel cans which are what I call the “middle of the road set” which are Bose QC25’s. I jacked them in and it was more of the same. the headset boasted a more pronounced bass response along with having a much smoother transition between highs and lows with a defined reduction in mud in the middle ground.

I am no audiophile by any means and not an expert in audio but the difference between the audio I have lived with for years form a motherboard and thought was good enough just got flipped on its lid.

Game Testing

Gaming tests is where I was interested to see the difference and once again I was not disappointed. While the motherboard audio performed admirably, I did find that the Sound BlasterX AE-5 allowed for an easier ability to discern between different sound sources especially in live fire scenarios such as FPS games where gunfire and explosions cause cause things to get confusing very quickly.

The games themselves do alot of the audio control as far as what sounds you hear and from where so there were scenarios where you cannot control the fact that an explosion deadens your ability to hear another noise. But when for instance multiple people are moving around you in a game like PUBG, I found it much easier to pick out who was moving above me vs around the sides of me.

I did enable the scout mode for a few minutes and I would indeed consider it unfair as it heightened the intensity at which you hear people sneaking around you. However one thing to note is that the boosted sounds can actually be disorienting at least in my case as I began to get overwhelmed and it became harder to discern people who were 2 building away vs right outside where I was at the moment. I think that Scout stuff is better left off.

Moving to a Racing game such as Forza 7 which is my current racer of choice. I found that the audio once again was much clearer with a much easier to pinpoint sound origins such as vehicles racing around me and where I should expect them without even needing to rotate my players camera angle to look.

While the Discrete card made a huge difference you are going to notice short comings very quickly on a cheaper headset as I found quality of drivers are very important to audio reproduction. I think that comes as a surprise to nobody but its something I felt worth noting as you should definitely plan on investing in a solid headset if you plan to game with teh Sound BlasterX AE-5 just to ensure you get the best possible performance whether it be listening to music or media, or you are gaming.

Check Also

Review Overview

Time to look at what feels like an old friend Before we dive into the new Sound BlasterX AE-5 we must do a little archeology. Put on your time traveler hats as we look back into the origins of PC as I grew up with. I an remember the beginning days of my PC experience. It was ISA slots and several KB of onboard RAM. Yea that's right, back then we did not judge or even think of memory in Megabytes but in Kilobytes.. Motherboards back then also were very barren for connectivity with only the basics such as a…

Creative Sound BlasterX AE-5 – Is The Sound Card Really Dead?

Creative Sound BlasterX AE-5 – Is The Sound Card Really Dead?

2018-11-30

Shannon Robb

Creative Sound BlasterX AE-5

Value - 8.5

Performance - 9.5

Innovation - 9

Quality - 9

90

9

The Sound BlasterX AE-5 is an impressive audio solution offering an experience far beyond what we found possible by even high end motherboard audio solutions.